Without the "black boxes", investigators say there is not enough
information to explain why flight MS804 crashed on May 19, killing all
66 people on board.
A
passenger reads a newspaper at a departure hall of London's Heathrow
terminal as an EgyptAir plane taxis on the tarmac of the airport May 20,
2016.
The flight data recorders from an EgyptAir
jet that crashed in the Mediterranean last month are expected to stop
emitting signals on June 24, and search boats are working against the
clock to retrieve them, Egyptian investigators said on Monday.
Without the "black boxes", investigators say there is not enough information to explain why flight MS804 crashed on May 19, killing all 66 people on board.
The
Egyptian-led investigation committee said in a statement that it had
accepted a request by the United States' National Transportation Safety
Board (NTSB) to have a representative join the investigation team.
The
plane's engines were built by a consortium led by the U.S. firm Pratt
& Whitney. The country where the engines were built is often invited
to take part in an air crash investigation, although it is not
compulsory.
Investigators also said on Monday that
radar imagery obtained from the Egyptian military confirmed previous
reports based on Greek and British radar data indicating that the plane
had swerved in mid-air before crashing.
Egyptian
Air Navigation had previously said that the plane suddenly disappeared
off the radar at cruising altitude around 37,000 feet. Those comments
contradicted the Greek defence minister's account on the day of the
crash that the plane had turned sharply to the left, then 360 degrees to
the right before disappearing from radar at 15,000 feet.
That
conclusion is important, said one aviation source, because it goes some
way to excluding the possibility that the plane was brought down by a
mid-air explosion.
France's air accident
investigation agency, the BEA, which is advising Egypt on the underwater
search, has said that one of the search ships has continued to pick up
locator signals from one black box, whose position has been narrowed to
within 1 to 2 km (just over a mile).
To recover
the black boxes from the seabed, 3,000 metres below the surface,
investigators will need to pinpoint the signals to within a few metres
and establish whether the pingers are still connected to the recorders.
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